TYB!
kek
cap for baker
Qanon Army, British division #WWG1WGA
@100Brexit
Many have asked who Q is.
We are all Q.
This is the meaning of #WWG1WGA
All of us patriots who care about our country and don't want to see it destroyed.
That is why we must stick together.
Who is with me?
#QArmy
#WWG1WGA_WORLDWIDE
#QANONWORLDWIDE
https://twitter.com/100Brexit/status/1257726886681206786
Get this Twatter a high-res header image!
WE WARNED YOU THIS WOULD HAPPEN
The Dems are Coming for the Senate
this is no joke. One small snapshot:
US Senate race in Maine
The marquee race in New England this year will be in Maine, where Republican Susan Collins, seeking her fifth term, is facing a very real battle. Collins was first elected to the Senate in 1996 and for years has been seen by voters as a perfect fit for the state’s once-moderate political temperament. But like everywhere else in the country, politics in Maine has become very polarized.
Massachusetts US Senate
While this contest won’t really be decided in November (spoiler: a Democrat will win), the Sept. 1 primary is one of the most important Massachusetts elections in a long time and is worth mentioning. Incumbent Senator Ed Markey, 73, is seeking reelection but is being challenged by US Representative Joe Kennedy III, who is 39.
The contest was expected to be a blockbuster featuring a generational divide and, well, a Kennedy on a Massachusetts statewide ballot. While the race will heat up, it is unclear how campaigning in the coronavirus era will change things exactly.
The stakes: if Kennedy wins, he may turn around to run for president soon thereafter. If Markey wins, it is hard to see how he doesn’t have the seat for life.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/05/05/metro/with-six-months-until-election-day-here-are-four-new-england-contests-watch/
ALWAYS. I am not even logged in and PM is first. It's the friendly, "New to Q?" and "Q for beginners video Part 1" pinned post that keeps him in good graces.
Time for bed, Gypsy.
Good stuff, fren. You got it.
We seem to be in the process of that right now, don'tcha think?
Cohen-Watnick’s history becomes murkier around 2008, his final year at Penn. His friend from school says the last time they saw him or heard from him was before the spring semester that year.